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COPYRIGHT BY R. H. TUTTLE, 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 



A MOUNTAIN IDYL, 



OR 



The White Cliff Souvenir. 



BY 



Rev. R;--M. Tuttle. 






For scenic beauty, health and rest, 
The mountain regions are the best. 



g^O 



ppefaGC. 



The occasion of the following poem wa^ a sojourn of 
thirty days, in the summer of 1889, with my wife and son 
{to zvkom the booklet is affectionately dedicated) at the 
White Cliff Springs, This watering place is on the very 
top of what is known as the Chilhowee range, which 
mounts up 3.000 feet above the sea, and is in Monroe 
County, East Tennessee, i6'/2 miles nort'ieast of Athens. 
It has been a noted resort for many years, and for the 
last 16 or 17 seasons has bean under the very able 
management of J. H. Magill, Esq., who justly enjoys an 
enviable reputation as a caterer for all classes of guests 
in quest of rest, comfort, and pleasure. 

The essential featuies of the poem are in accordance 
with fact, and a simple reproduction of nature in a 
poetic dress. |) 

I send the lines forth with «he hope that they may ') 

please and elevate. R. M. TUTTLE. jj 



CoMANCHF, Tex. 



P f^ouRtaiij) Idtjl 




E awake one August morning 

In a stately modern ark, 
Rising proudly in the centre 

Of a little mountain park, 
And with very many features 

That are worthy of remark. 

We had dreamed of surging waters, 
Topping lofty mountain-crest; 

Of a human habitation. 

Floating on the billows' breast; 

Of an Ararat uplifted 

For its anchorage and rest. 

But, aside from dream or fancy, 
Hrre's a mansion on the mont. 

And palatial in proportions. 
With a triple-storied front, 

With its rooms, and halls, and porches, 
And just everything we want. 

Hark! a bell! a bell is ringing. 

Waking echoes in the hall; 
Then, anon, a band of viols 

Makes another matin call. 
And in measures apUy suited 

To a merry evening ball. 



So we rise for an ablution, 
And a garb is on us thrown, 

While the dewy air comes to us 
With a freshness all its own, 

And the breakfast bell is- ringing 
In a sharp, inviting' tone. 

Down one flight, and then another, 

Of an easy grade of stairs, 
We are in the large apartment 

Where are served the choicest fares, 
And the liveried servants greet us 

With a drawing back of chairs. 

Bright, and clean, and very airy 
Do we find the dining room. 

And the guests with cheerful faces 
Banish every touch of gloom, 

And the food is so abundant 
None his portion can consume. 

But the figure most noteworthy 
Is our old-time, kindly host. 

Ever present, and as watchful 
As a sentry on his post, 

And to deal out equal favor 
Is his daily pride and boast. 

Soon we test the healing waters 
Scarce two hundred feet away, 

Where the iron, sulphur, alum 
In solution, day by day, 

Issue out their pure libations. 
And forever seem to say: — 

'Quaff us, quaff us very freely. 

Child, and man, and womanhood; 

We are cordials for the weary, 
And can only do you good. 

For we purify the system. 
And re-vitalize the blood." 



Soft and helpful are the waters, 
But, as well, the ambient air, 

Pure, and bracing, and transparent, 
God's own chemical so rare, 

Is a very potent factor 

In the body's sound repair. 

Cheerful tributes, and most hearty. 
To these elements we pay. 

Ever present, ever ready. 
Every moment of the day, 

For our c»)m^ort, and our pleasure, 
And to heal us, if they may. 

Now we'll tell you of our jovirney, 

Uneventful though it be. 
All the way from pretty Athens, 

Or the Eye of Tennessee, 
Till we reached the ancient summit 

Of Chilhowee, by degree. 

To Chestua, eighty furlongs. 

On the Tellico we came, 
And a more exciting passage 

No old traveler could name, 
Than was ours with pon} engine. 

And an outfit much the same. 

How exciting! whistle blowing 
Every rod it seemed to me, 

Brakemen running, bells a-ringing 
As in deepest fog at sea. 

All because they spied some cattle, 
Or a rabbit chanced to see. 

From the Station our conveyance 
Was a hackney-coach and four; 

Roads were heavy, steeds were weary, 
Yet we climbed the foothills o'er, 

Making once, but once a halting 
At a little country store. 



Then the toiling up the mountain 
With the rock chffs over head, 

And below us deep abysses, 
Reaching to an ocean bed. 

With a roadway, narrow, winding, . 
While it ever upward led. 

We arrived at last in safety, 

At the hour of eventide; 
Not a bone at all was broken, 

Though well shaken by the ride, 
And the warm reception given 

Made us feel much gratified. 

Mount of mounts for scenic beauty! 

You can find no grander views. 
No more graphic page of nature, 

Or inspiring, to peruse. 
And their daily contemplation 

Would arouse the staid recluse. 

Here we stand, as on a pivot. 
Sheer three thousand feet in air, 

With a view Kaleidoscopic, 
And as wonderful as rare, 

And as billowy in its outlines 
As the stormy oceans are. 

See the mountain chains receding, 
Like a broken ocean wave, 

Serried range to range succeeding. 
Swelling up toward heaven's nave. 

Till we reach the giant Smokies, 
Arching like a nation's grave. 

Amphitheatre of mountains. 
Terraced up to azure vault! 

Sittings for earth's myriad mortals, 
And the gods can find no fault. 

And a passing observation 

Does our drowsy powers exalt. 



— 9— 

How confused! In what a tangle 
This whole region seems to one! 

Knobs and peaks, and spurs and ridges, 
In a jumble wildly thrown. 

But the patient student o± them 
Sees an order all their own. 

Mention not Sierras, Rockies, 
Or the mountains of the East; 

Here is grandeur the uniquest, 
And for any soul a feast, 

And, if one is unmoved by it, 
We must pity him at least. 

Far below us is a valley. 

By the line, twelve hundred feet. 
Hemmed and fringed by primal forests. 

And with many a country seat, 
And unfolding such a picture 

As we rarely ever meet. 

Now the solar beams are on it. 
Lighting up the moving scene; 

Field and forest, wood and clearing, 
Covered all in golden sheen. 

Form a very grand mosaic. 

Like some patchwork we have seen. 

From yon gorge, so deep and rayless. 

Issues out a limpid stream, 
Winding like a thread of silver. 

Or a glinting, glassy seam. 
Through the bosom of the valley. 

And as noiseless as a dream. 



Sinuous as a serpent's trail; 
On through verdant fields it courses. 

Traversing the dainty vale, 
Adding beauty to the landscape; 

And its waters never fail. 



Hail! all-hail! fair Conasauga, 
Name of stream and valley too; 

From the height we look upon you, 
Ever seeing something new, 

Nor could Switzer be more ravished 
Over any Alpine view. 

Once, thou wast a sea of forest, 
Traversed by the red man's trails, 

Nourishing the game that fed him, 
And accustomed to his wails, 

But the veil is taken from thee. 
And a harvest never fails. 

It is morn, and very early. 
And the fog is on the lea 

And the valley covers over 
As a smooth and level sea. 

And some emerald islets dot it — 
Here and there a verdant tree. 

See! the day-orb's rising on it, 
Crescent-shaped and very red. 

Growing to a sphere of crimson. 
As if from a gory bed. 

And, though like a ball of fire. 
Not a single ray is shed. 

Scene of wonder! with a border 
Of an azure mountain wall, 

And we sometimes do imagine 
We can hear the fogman's call. 

While below it are the crofters. 
And their little clearings small. 

Now the sun is risen higher. 
Showing forth a glowing disk. 

Gilding all as if some goddess 
Did it with a mighty whisk. 

Changing fog to sea of glory 
With a movement very brisk. 



Look! the solar heat expands it, 

And the fog begins to rise, |i 

Turning to a troubled ocean 

Right before our dazzled eyes, 
And we seem to hear the breakers, 

And the sea-bird's wildest cries. 

All is now in dread commotion — 

Billows upon billows pile. 
Angry, foaming waves are rushing 

To the shore for many a mile, 
And we see the surges breaking, 

Dashing up the spray the while. 

Rarer grows the fog, and lighter. 

Into cloudlets gathering. 
And they, fleecy, soar above us. 

Like a lark on morning wing, 
Or, like white flecks from the washing, 

To the mountain sides they cling. 

Gone the spell! The vale is sunlit. 

And the vapor disappears, 
And our phantom, fleeting ocean 

Flits like dreams of other years, 
And we wipe away, unconscious. 

Many now upstarting tears. 

In the west king Sol is setting. 

And a gala day goes by; 
One by one, the stars are studding, 

Up above, the azure sky, 
When the mist again condenses 

And the folds of vapor lie. 

Wider, longer, and yet deeper 

Does the robe of fog expand. 
Till it covers, lake like, over 

All the nether leagues of land. 
And an inland sea we call it. 

With its islands and its strand. 



But behold! fair Luna rises 
With her silver horns well filled, 

And from her full face a radiance 
On the grey mist is distilled, 

When we feign a moonlit river 
With its voice and current stilled. 

Fancy sees a gliding wherry, 

Or a slender bark canoe, 
And in it a brave and maiden, 

Going forth by night to woo, 
Or to make a passage over 

To the dusky hills in view. 

Scene ecstatic! fairy haunted. 

Sweetly muse-inspiring too, 
Morpheus calls, but still we linger, 

And each moment all is new, 
Nor to this fantastic river 

Can we bear to say, Adieu. 

The kaleidoscope is turning. 
And 'tis noon, a gladsome day. 

And above, the flecks of cloudlets, 
Intercepting each a ray. 

Give us shadow with the sunshine. 
And the two together play. 

Hence, the scene is ever changing. 
As we glance from peak to peak; 

Norv a home is wrapped in shadow, 
Norv is sunlit ere we speak. 

For the light and shade, as children. 
Seem to play at "Hide and seek." 

See them chase each one the other 

Rapidly from range to range. 
Sweeping down to hill and valley. 

Thence in backward movement strange, 
Till the landscape is ashimmer 

From the never-ceasing change. 



[3— 



True, a zephvr is a factor 

In this rare, bewitching sight, 

For ^olus ott is playful 

For his godship's own delight, 

When the atmosphere is looming. 
And the day is warm and bright. 

Yes, the atmosphere is looming, 
And yon mountain side is flecked 

With white vapor, very cloudlets, 
And no movement we detect. 

And they look like wild goats crouching, 
In their spotless fleeces decked. 

Halcyon day! the air transparent! 

And we see with farthest ken ; 
Fringe of trees on distant mountains. 

Every notch, ravine and glen 
Stands out clearly, and seems to us. 

Than before, as near again. 

Why such frantic agitation 

In the movement of each guest? 

Storm! a storm it is approaching. 
Coming from the north and west, 

Aud the lips are pale from terror, 
And there's many an anxious breast. 

Down the sooty clouds are drifting, 
Down the craggy mountain side. 

And in pitchy folds condensing 
Through the valley far and wide. 

And we gaze upon the blackness 
Near the hour of eventide. 

Now the thunder's detonations 

Shake the everlasting hills, 
And the hoarse reverberation 

Every frame with tremor fills. 
And the sheet and forked lightning 

Lights the darkness as it wills. 



-14— 



Long we look with consternation, 

And with very deepest awe: 
Scene of grandeur this surpasnng 

Surely mortals never saw, 
Save when God to man was giving. 

From the Mount, His holy Law. 

How we feel for those below Us, 
'Neath that pall of murky cloud. 

Where war elemental rages 

O'er their heads with thunders loud; 

Truly, many, many of them 

Must in fervent prayer be bowed. 

Night has thrown her veil upon us, 
And the storm its force has spent. 

And the argent stars above us 

Twinkle down their sweet content, 

While we cherish feelings, quickened. 
Of the Power omnipotent. 

Ah! how wondrous the Almighty! 

Everywhere we trace His power 
And His wisdom and His goodness, 

And not only in this hour, 
For His attributes are prcent 

Even in the smallest flower. 

Once, in our perambulations. 

Finding a neglected plate, 
We a moment paused to hear it 

Its own history narrate, 
And it did to fertile fancy 

This bare modicum relate: 

"Friend, I'm old, and much discolored 
"And the ragged edges show, 

"Though, as mirror, once was polished, 
"And as white as driven snow, 

"But I've lost the ring of silver, 
"And the gloss I used to know." 



•15- 



*'Manj years upon this mountain 
'♦Have I served the coming guest; 

•♦Young and old, and strong and feeble, 
"All have seen me at my best, 

"And the food have taken from me 
"With a relish and a zest." 

"Jeweled hands have often touched me — 
"Planters' daughters from the South, 

"Yea, from every point of compass 
"Guests have handled me in sooth, 
"Bright and gay, and highly favored, 
"And the polished and uncouth." 

"Would that some fair hand would hang me, 

"Kindly, on her parlor wall, 
"With some wild flowers painted on me, 

"And but this inscription small: — 
"I'm the plate that often served you 

"In the White Cliff dining hall." 

Let us visit now a marvel 

That in wonderment appalls; 
Picturesque, sublime, romantic. 

It is known as "Bullet Falls," 
And in wild and scenic beauty 

Loud for admiration calls. 

Here are walls of flint uprising. 

Vertical, to dizzy height. 
Crowned and clad with trees and lichens, 

Shutting out the solar light. 
With great bowlders at their bases, 

Hurled there by unearthly might. 

Through a canyon, deep and narrow, 

From a mountain-terrace high 
Down a stream of water gushes, 

As if from the nether sky. 
Sliding, leaping, roaring, foaming. 

And its echoes never die. 



-i6 



On it rushes, booming louder, 
Where it makes a sudden bound; 

Here it chisels out a basin, 

Where a crystal pool is found; 

There it shoots a down a rapid 
With a sharp and hissing sound. 

Then, "The Falls," — a sheer depression. 
Dropping down full forty feet, 

Over which the torrent plunges 
In an ever-falling sheet. 

And a thousand vocal organs 

Could not with its voice compete. 

From above it, we, in transport, 
Look down on the magic scene. 

While the brawny arm<? of laurel 
Hold us as we over lean. 

And to mountain spirit, truly. 

Ours would seem a raptured mien. 

From below it, we gaze upward 
At the volume pouring down, 

And survey the walls surrounding. 
Bearing up their leafy crown — 

Flinty walls of ages ancient, 

P'urrowed, battered, grey and brown. 

Presently, a sud Jen splendor 
IssutL-s from the mid-day sun, 

Causing changes thesublimest 
In the objects, one by one. 

And that torretit does not %vater^ 
But a stream of diamonds run. 

Every globule is a prism, 

And a pure, transparent gem. 

And the rainbow colors shimmer 
As a halo over them. 

While around the sheet of water 
There's a party-colored hem. 



—17— 

ii 

(j 

What a nook of charming beauty ! '' 

At our feet a glassy pool ; 
Rock-divans arranged around it 

Offer to us sittings cool, 
And the solitude and flora 

Add enchantment for the soul. 

Chiefs, perhaps, and painted warriors 

Of the redman's waning race 
Very often, faint and weary, 

In this fairy-haunted place, (| 

In the noontide of past summers, '| 

Rested here from off the chase. j 

Scarce a change is wrought upon it. (| 

It is as f//ey saw it then— ( 

Rocks and pool, and falling water, ■ 

And the wildness of the glen, |! 

And the same it will be, doubiles«, ;i 

To the future race of men. I 

Here Vre tarry with the feeling |i 

That we could forever stay; (| 

None of us hold friendly converse— | 

Not a word we wish to say, [ 

For we would be mutely musing, | 

And be kissed by falling spraj'. ( 

(. 
But the eye of day is closing. 

And the sk^ has lost its fire; 1 

Every covert gathers darkness, () 

And the rot ks are weird and dire, (j 

And with awe, and feelings solemn, ) 

We reluctantlv retire. ]) 



Up we climb, as on a ladder. 
Up and up the winding steep. 

Many of us so exhausted 

That the limbs will hardly creep , 

And the most part covet only- 
Food, and perfect rest, and sleep. 



-i8- 



When above the giant stairway, 
Clouds of glory meet our view, 

And in forms the most fantastic. 
And with gorgeousness of hue. 

And we bless the day-star, setting. 
For such magic ever new. 

Charming sunsets oft are penciled 
For our admiration here; 

Can we look upon their beanty, 
And the Painter not revere? 

Nay, such visions overcome us, 
And we feel a holy fear. 

Night, the goddess, draws around us 
Once again her ebon veil. 

And we give ourselves to slumber — 
Not an insect to assail, 
i And, without the heat of Summer, 

We arise, at dawning, hale. 

Soon the morning meal is taken. 
And we start the daily round, 

Breathing in the wine of ether, 
Or the subtle ozone found. 

And re-traversing the roadways 
Of this old historic ground. 

By-paths everywhere meander, 
Hedged and canopied with trees. 

And such ample walks affording 
As pedestrians to please, 

And from causes atmospheric 

E'en the weakest walk with ease. 

Aye, these mountain ways are lovely 
Anywhere we choose to roam. 

For Dame Nature makes her suitors 
Everywhere to feel at home. 

And she shares her gifts as freely 
As the ocean wave its foam. 



— 19— 

Do vou love the ferns and flowers? 

Here they are on every hand, 
And the solitudes, unbroken, 

Hourly are at your command. 
Where the botanist may revel 

In a high, enchanted land. 

Ah ! these hardy tribes of flora 

On this elevated ground, 
Many-tinted and ambrosial, 

With a modest glory crowned. 
Smile, and nod a welcome to us. 

Wheresoever they are found. 

In our daily forest rambles. 
We observe a tender plant, 

Which uprises in a night's time. 
And a marvel is, we grant. 

But about its growth and nature 
Time is wanting to descant. 

True, we say of it, "A mushroom," 

In our every- day parlance. 
But to fancy they are altars 

Round which roguish fairies dance. 
And from which they sip the nectar 

Furnished by the gods, perchance. 

Here's the paradise of fairies. 

And of all the elfin race, 
And 'twould be a fine diversion 

For one's fancy here to trace 
Something of their life and travels 

In this sky-uplifted place. 

Come, Geologists, and wonder. 
Here's preadamite forsooth. 

Moulded when the earth was clearly 
In the morning of her youth, 

And time's ravages resisting 
As Gibraltar has in truth. 



See these rockeries around us, 

Which we view with keen surprise; 

Here the sharp and jagged ledges 
Turn their edges to the skies; 

There lie bowlders in confusion ; 
Here and there a tablet lies. 

Over them we idly wander,' 

And from stone to stone descend, 

No^v reclining on their bosom, 
Etching norv the name of friend. 

And thej ready are to serve us, 
And are patient to the end. 

Could they speak to us in language. 
And we knew their mother tongue. 

They could tell us things romantic. 
That had happened them among, 

And could sing us touching ballads. 
That in other days were sung. 

Near by rise the stony turrets 

Of this castellated height; 
White and Black Cliffs let us mention, 

Also, Bellevue for its sight, 
And we scale them almost daily 

With a mountaineer's delight. 

As an eagle from his eyrie. 

With a very lordly air. 
Peers into the depths abysmal; 

So from pinnacles we stare. 
And survey the world below us. 

And the pigmy objects there. 

Down we look in manner listless, 

Lost in reverie the while. 
Or the eye pursues a shadow 

In some distant, deep defile; 
Or we hunt z. genus homoy 

Though we never gain a smile. 



Ah! the silences oppress us, 

Standing on these frowning cliffs, 

As out of deep seas of forest 
Not an antler's morning sniffs, 

Or a bark of squirrel greets us, 
And we think a thousand ifs. 

If a single note of songster 

Could but wake our stagnant ear. 

Or a cow-bell's lazy tinkle 

Or one milk-maid we could hear, 

We could bear the death-like stillness 
With a modicum of cheer. 

Oft we sit, as would a watchman. 
On these balconies of stone. 

Till the shadows flee before us, 
And the light of day is gone. 

Gazing speechless at the landscape, 
Yet the gazing's never done. 

We must not forget the City — 
Called "The City of the Rocks," 

Having streets, and for its buildings 
Hoary heaps of massy blocks. 

And with Cyclopean towers 

That have stood Time's rudest shocks 

Fancy says, in ages early 

Anakim assembled here. 
And their superhuman powers 

Put to tests the most severe. 
Building turrets, and these bowlders 

Placing as they now appear. 

Frequently among the ledges, 
On this mountain-top so high, 

P'ind we golden-rod in blooming 
With its gold to tempt the eye, 

And its gracefulnsss and glory 
Ever charm the passer-by. 



As an emblem for our Country, 
Is there any flower more fair, 

Suited to the vale and mountain, 
And so present everywhere? 

Truly, none can claim more beauty, 
Or the honor better wear. 

Give the lily to the Frenchman ; 

Give the thistle to the Scot; 
Give the rose to merry England; 

But the go'.den-rod we wot 
Is our choice of all the bloomers, 

Whether grown in field or pot. 

'Neath the White Cliff is a grotto- 
Cupid's it is christened, too, 

Where a little alcove offers 
Barely room enoug^h for two. 

And 'twould suit the most romantic 
As a happy place to woo. 

Roof and walls and sittings cozy 

Are of pre-historic stone, 
While some laurel decks the ceiling, 

As a fresco o'er a throne. 
And below it an abyss is. 

Where old broken vows are thrown. 

Doubtless, in the happy by-gones. 
There have been espousals there, 

For the gay and nubile couples 
Oftentimes to it repair. 

And the place is so suggestive 
Of a marital affair. 

It is said, or did I dream it? 

That an heiress with her maid 
Spent an ante bellum Summer 

In this home of rest and shade. 
And that here she met a tourist. 

And a captive he was made 



■23— 

)) 



Young and fair, and gay and winsome, 
With a charm about her voice, 

Woven sunshine for her tresses. 
With a heart that must rejoice, 

And with dreamy eyes of azure. 
She became his lucky choice. 

Very handsome was her suitor, 
Cultured, and of fine address; 

He had, too, a charm of manner 
That would any one impress, 

And possessed an ample fortune 
For a home without excess. 

To the grotto, it is hinted. 

They resorted day by day. 
And, when Cynthia's horns were fullest, 

They would nightly to it stray. 
For it seemed a spot enchanted, 

And they dreamed the hours away. 

There futurity unveiling, 
They forecast a plan of life. 

Covenanting with each other. 
That they would be man and wife, 

And, in view of bliss domestic. 
Their prospective joy was rife. 

Soon the season had its ending. 
And the new-made lovers part, 

As do always the affianced. 
With an almost-broken heart; 

To the sunny South, the heiress; 
To the North, must he depart. 

Then were years of gloom and sorrow, 
And no missives went and came; 

War unfurled his gory banner. 

And went forth with sword and flame, 

And a once-united people 
Battled in God's holy name. 



—24— 



But the cloud of war passed over, 
And the dove of peace appeared, 

And the lovers still were living, 
And they from each other heard. 

Though had gone by years of silence, 
Since from either came a word. 

Tried and true through yeai^s of sadness, 
They at length were duly wed. 

Though the heiress of her fortune. 
Of her home, and downy bed 

Had been robbed by war, red-handed. 
And her loved ones all were dead. 

Fortune favors the true-hearted. 
And she smiled on these again; 

Comforts came, and times of plenty. 
And to wealth they did attain. 

And the happiness they dreamed of 
Entered heart and home to reign. 

You have read of, here we see, him — 
Well, the typic mountaineer, 

With his quaintest of old folk-lore. 
And his hunting coat and cheer, 

And contentment sits upon him 
With a very knowing leer. 

Careless of his food and raiment. 
Nature's simple, artless child. 

Wedded to his dog and rifle. 
Living in a region wild. 

He is happier than thousands 

On whom fortune long has smiled. 

One, for instance, glibly told us, 
That he made the passing year, 

(And with boasting) forty dollars^ 
And that ttve?ity-Jive^ or near. 

Would meet all the year's expenses 
Of his cabin home so dear. 



-25— 



Then bethought we of the her. nit, 
Who did earth-born care forego, 

And this aphorism left us: — 
•*Man wants little here below," 

And it seemed our rustic brother 
Knew what all of us should know. 

Far below our view-verandas, 

Yet above the leafy sea, 
On most airy wing the buzzards, 

In girations broad and free. 
Daily soar without an effort 

That a practised eye can see. 

How the pinions wide expanded, 
Rigid seem as bronze ones are! 

And we judge they could forever 
Circle in the ambient air. 

While we look with admiration 
At the mute birds, sailing there. 

Proud inventor, get the secret 

From our feathered friends down 
there, 

And prepare a car with pinions. 
That will travel through the air, 

And we'll take a passage with you 
To the World's approaching Fair. 

Sometimes, at the day's declining. 
O'er the mountains in the East, 

Like old feudal castles fashioned. 
Poise mid-summer clouds abreast 

And the whole is many-tinted 
By a radiance from the West. 

How the feelings grow ecstatic 

Over such fantastic forms! 
Yea, we marvel that a sunset 

Leaden vapor so transforms, 
And we gaze in spell-bound wonder 

Till are fled the fleeting charms. 



-26- 



Time would fail us now to tell you 
All about this famed retreat: 

Come with us some future Summer, 
And your heart with ours will beat, 

For this cloudland will its glories 
Ever, evermore repeat. 

Here are guests from every quarter. 
North and South, and East and West; 

From Iowa, Alabama, 

Jersey, Kansas, each some guest; 

Georgia, Tennessee, and Texas 
Send with Florida the rest. 

They are here from many life-walks, 
E'e.i the l)oy with cigarette; 

Two are amateur artists, 

Armed with pencil and palette; 

Others are from trades, profe^sions, 
Simply needed rest to get. 

All, indeed, whatever station 
They had filled in life at home, 

Find Edenic rest and freedom 
Right upon this mountain-dome, 

And in Summer, none would leave it 
For Utopia to roam. 

As for Sabbaths, holy Sabbaths, 
It has been our custom here. 

Morn and eve, to meet together, 
And God's august name revere, 

And to sing His highest praises, 
And the gospel-message hear. 

For we've had among us, resting, 

Willing ministers of grace. 
Who have stood, the Savior's legates, 

In the high and holy place, 
And have taught us truth and duty, 

And the way to win the race. 



-27— 



To the pure and tonic water, 

To the circumambient air, 
To the many pleasant servants, 

To the host av-d hostess fair, 
We return our thanks in parting 

With a wish and fervent prayer. 

Here the lives of all, so precious. 

No sore evil did befall, 
Though there were so many of us — 

Some so weak, and some so small, 
And we owe our preservation 

To Jehovah over all. 

Praise Him, in the highest praise Him, 

For the tokens of His love. 
For our rest and recreation, 

For all blessings from above. 
And our gratitude, in future, 

We to Him should daily prove. 

Here I stay my pen in writing 

Of this terrene glory-land; 
It has been a work of pleasure. 

For the heart was with the hand. 
Thus to write in simple measures 

What our eager eyes have scanned. 



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